The valley is the lowest place where all waters gather; starting before ready means beginning from humility rather than assumed competence.
Laozi repeatedly honors the valley, the low place where all waters naturally flow. The valley spirit is receptive, humble, and paradoxically powerful because it claims nothing and therefore cannot be diminished. When starting before ready, embrace the beginner's position, the low status, the admitted ignorance. This is not false modesty but strategic wisdom: those who claim competence stop learning; those who acknowledge their beginning position remain open. The valley principle suggests that starting small, quietly, without announcement creates less resistance and more room to grow. You're not threatening anyone's position when you begin in the valley. You can observe, learn, and gather resources without the burden of defending a high status. In technology startups, this is bootstrap mentality. In personal relationships, it's approaching others with genuine curiosity rather than established authority. In creative work, it's the unknown artist's freedom from reputation. The paradox is that those who begin in the valley, accepting their lowliness, eventually become the gathered waters—influential and powerful—while those who start at the mountain peak have only one direction to fall.
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